Stonelayer (original) (raw)

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A stonelayer, or soil stonelayer, or stone line, is a three-dimensional subsurface layer, or soil horizon, dominated by coarse particles (>2mm), that generally follows (mimics) the surface topography (Sharpe 1938). A stonelayer occupies the basal horizon of two-layered soilbiomantles (Paton et al. 1995; Schaetzl and Anderson 2005; Fey 2009; Wilkinson et al. 2009). A stonelayer may be one stone thick, and thus appear in a trench or pit as a "stone line," or it may be several stones thick and appear as a "stone zone" (Johnson 1989). The gravel components of stonelayers may be compositionally variable, and while many are lithic clasts, often of quartzose composition, others may be metallic nodules and concretions of iron and manganese oxides, human artifacts, snail and clam shells (in highly

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dbo:abstract A stonelayer, or soil stonelayer, or stone line, is a three-dimensional subsurface layer, or soil horizon, dominated by coarse particles (>2mm), that generally follows (mimics) the surface topography (Sharpe 1938). A stonelayer occupies the basal horizon of two-layered soilbiomantles (Paton et al. 1995; Schaetzl and Anderson 2005; Fey 2009; Wilkinson et al. 2009). A stonelayer may be one stone thick, and thus appear in a trench or pit as a "stone line," or it may be several stones thick and appear as a "stone zone" (Johnson 1989). The gravel components of stonelayers may be compositionally variable, and while many are lithic clasts, often of quartzose composition, others may be metallic nodules and concretions of iron and manganese oxides, human artifacts, snail and clam shells (in highly calcareous soils), precious and semi-precious stones, or some combination thereof (Aleva 1983, 1987; Johnson 2002). (en)
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dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbc:Pedology dbr:Stone_line dbr:Soil_Biomantle dbr:Marker_horizon dbr:Soil_horizon dbr:Soil dbr:Soil_[[Soil_Biomantle
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:Citation_needed
dcterms:subject dbc:Pedology
gold:hypernym dbr:Layer
rdf:type dbo:AnatomicalStructure
rdfs:comment A stonelayer, or soil stonelayer, or stone line, is a three-dimensional subsurface layer, or soil horizon, dominated by coarse particles (>2mm), that generally follows (mimics) the surface topography (Sharpe 1938). A stonelayer occupies the basal horizon of two-layered soilbiomantles (Paton et al. 1995; Schaetzl and Anderson 2005; Fey 2009; Wilkinson et al. 2009). A stonelayer may be one stone thick, and thus appear in a trench or pit as a "stone line," or it may be several stones thick and appear as a "stone zone" (Johnson 1989). The gravel components of stonelayers may be compositionally variable, and while many are lithic clasts, often of quartzose composition, others may be metallic nodules and concretions of iron and manganese oxides, human artifacts, snail and clam shells (in highly (en)
rdfs:label Stonelayer (en)
owl:sameAs freebase:Stonelayer wikidata:Stonelayer https://global.dbpedia.org/id/4vCY5
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Stonelayer?oldid=1123305495&ns=0
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is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of dbr:Perturbation_(geology) dbr:Stone_line dbr:Soil_formation dbr:Soil_horizon dbr:Soil_biomantle
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Stonelayer